6 results match your criteria: "INRCA IRCCS-National Institute of Health and Science on Ageing[Affiliation]"
Innov Aging
December 2024
Centre for Socio-Economic Research on Ageing, INRCA IRCCS-National Institute of Health and Science on Ageing, Ancona, Italy.
Background And Objectives: This study explores the association between informal caregiving for older adults and environmentally sustainable behaviors across the 27 European Union countries, aiming to identify how the gendered and domestic nature of environmentalism relates to senior care.
Research Design And Methods: Data from 41,742 respondents aged 16-74 were analyzed from the Survey of Gender Gaps in Unpaid Care, Individual and Social Activities, and conducted by a scientific consortium in 2022. Frequency of sustainable behaviors was measured across 10 indicators.
Eur J Ageing
January 2024
INRCA IRCCS-National Institute of Health and Science on Ageing, Centre for Socio-Economic Research on Ageing, 60124, Ancona, Italy.
The COVID-19 pandemic has changed the supply of formal and informal home care to older adults in many countries across the world. This study aims to compare the initial picture of how the supply of formal and informal home care to older adults in European countries and Israel changed during the first pandemic year (from mid-2020 to mid-2021) and to examine the changes that these countries made in the provision of adequate care to older adults. Using data from the two COVID-19 waves of SHARE, we show that the provision of formal home care services improved in the investigated period, as in 2021 the share of those who reported difficulties in receiving formal home care dropped significantly compared to the previous year.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Policy
April 2023
INRCA IRCCS - National Institute of Health and Science on Ageing, Centre for Socio-Economic Research on Ageing, Ancona, Italy.
Background: Considering the substantial information needs experienced by informal caregivers, the increased availability of digital support services for caregivers as well as the potential they offer, further understanding of caregivers' willingness to pay for digital support services is needed.
Objective: The aim of this study is to identify associations between informal caregiver's characteristics and their willingness to pay for digital support services in two countries: Italy and Sweden.
Methods: A sample of 378 respondents participated in a cross-sectional survey.
Eur J Ageing
December 2022
INRCA IRCCS-National Institute of Health and Science on Ageing, Centre for Socio-Economic Research On Ageing, 60124 Ancona, Italy.
The COVID-19 pandemic has created challenges in providing medical care for people with health conditions other than COVID-19. The study aims to assess the prevalence of older adults' reportage of decline in health relative to pre-pandemic and to identify its determinants. The study is based on the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) data collected during the pandemic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biosoc Sci
March 2023
INRCA IRCCS-National Institute of Health and Science on Ageing, Centre for Socio-Economic Research on Ageing, Ancona, Italy.
To promote long-term care policies for older adults, accurate mapping of the often invisible and insufficiently recognized role of their informal caregivers is needed. This paper measures the prevalence of informal caregivers in the European population, illustrates current difficulties in gathering unequivocal information on this topic and deals with the scientific and policy implications of the problem. Using the European Health Interview Survey (EHIS), the European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS) and the Study on Health and Ageing in Europe (SHARE), the current difficulties in gathering unequivocal information on this topic are illustrated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
December 2020
INRCA IRCCS-National Institute of Health and Science on Ageing, Centre for Socio-Economic Research on Ageing, 60124 Ancona, Italy.
Informal caregivers are people providing some type of unpaid, ongoing assistance to a person with a chronic illness or disability. Long-term care measures and policies cannot take place without taking into account the quantitatively crucial role played by informal caregivers. We use the European Health Interview Survey (EHIS), the European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS), and the Study on Health and Ageing in Europe (SHARE) to measure the prevalence of informal caregivers in the European population, and analyze associated socio-demographic factors.
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